From: The Slowest Builds in Human History
perspectivehistorical

In the Middle Ages, building a giant church was a community's ultimate goal. It brought jobs, pride, and tourists (called pilgrims) to the city. But these projects were also highly vulnerable. If a plague hit, half the stonemasons died. If a war started, the money went to soldiers instead of stone. This explains why building work often stopped for decades, or even centuries, at a time.

controversy

Supporting arguments

  • Plagues like the Black Death wiped out skilled workers.
  • Wars forced cities to spend money on defense instead of decoration.
  • Changes in religious fashion made older styles unpopular for a time.
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What else is in this exploration
3 evidence blocks3 visualizations2 insights9 media resources5 rabbit holes
evidence
The Sagrada Família in Spain is the longest-running active project today
evidence
Cologne Cathedral took over 600 years from start to finish
evidence
The Karnak Temple Complex in Egypt was built over a span of 2,000 years
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The Slowest Builds in Human History
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